Looking at those, I think they are that Andalusian blue. I could be totally wrong, but I’ll base some comments on that assumption. Bear with me a bit.
They should be split extended black and Wheaton. Split means the gene pair will have one extended black gene and one Wheaton gene. So their offspring has a 1/4 chance of being pure Wheaton, 1/4 chance of being pure extended black, and a 1/2 chance of being split. With extended black being dominant over Wheaton, 3/4 of the chicks should have the black in control.
They would also be split for the blue gene with the same odds of being 1/4 pure for the blue gene, 1/4 pure for the not-blue gene, or 1/2 split. If the offspring is pure for the blue gene, it is what is called Splash. If splash is on the extended black, the chick is basically white but with nice black splashes painted on. If it is on Wheaton, it acts differently. I can't remember what that combination looks like. I think mainly white but with other possible colors on the neck and wings, depending in what else is there.
If the chick is pure for the not-blue gene, then the chick is black on an extended black background, whether pure or split for extended black. On Wheaton, it will depend on the other genes but the chick will not be black.
If the chick is split for the blue gene, then it will be the color of your photos on extended black whether pure or split. On Wheaton, I think the chick will have blue pattern feathers but the other colors will depend on what else is present.
The barred gene and the gold/silver gene are sex linked genes. Your rooster will be split for both those. Your hens will have the not-barred and the gold gene only. The hen only has one copy of these genes. That's why they are called sex links. The barred and silver are dominant over the not-barred and gold. Sometimes due to other genes, you cannot see those genes however.
About half the chicks will wind up barred, whether male or female. On the black and blue offspring you will be able to see the barring if it is there. On the others, you will probably see the barring on the pattern feathers but maybe not the base feathers, depending on what color you wind up with.
On the chicks with the extended black, whether pure or split, the gold and silver probably won't matter. You might get a few feathers leaking through, but the colors will basically be blue or black. But on the chicks pure for Wheaton, it will matter quite a bit. Some of those will be gold or red. I’m not sure which exact shade but some shade of red. And the pattern color could be blue, black, or even splash which will basically be white.
If you throw all these together, you can see that there is a very wide range of possible combinations and this is only looking at four gene pairs. There is no way to know which of these any one chick will come up with. That’s why I won’t even try to guess what you’ll see. I’ve hatched the offspring of crosses before. With the same mixed rooster and the same mixed hens, two different hatches looked totally different. With one hatch of four chicks, I had two red barred. With another hatch from the same parents, out of 17 chicks I got no red barred. You just don’t know what you will get. But it is sure fun seeing how they turn out.